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See Page 6 For Holiday Recipes ...
SERVING THE PEOPLE OF HUNTLEY SINCE 1060
^)^t Jluntlep jfarmsJitre
HUNTLEY, ILLINOIS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1992 - VOLUME 32, NUMBER 29
USPS 580-360
This scary cast of characters terrified the town on Halloween weekend.
Jaycees Terrify IHuntley With Halioween Haunted House
By Joyce Liput
The Huntley Jaycees engaged in incredibly complicated preparations just to terrify the people of Huntley.
Together with the Huntley Park District, the Huntley Jaycees spent the week before Halloween turning Deicke Recreation Center's basement into a maze of frightful turns, tunnels and passages. "Monsters" of all descriptions began to gather for final preparations two hours before the "guests" arrived. Final instructions, flashlights and fire-extinguishers were issued as further safety precautions.
Just getting to the door could be unnerving, as patrons had the opportunity to slide their hands into bowls of brains, guts and eyeballs to get in the mood. With the screams of those going before echoing from within, they
proceeded down the stairs, a delightful look of anticipated fear on their faces. Bubbling cauldrons, a roaring chain saw, coffins (complete with dead flower arrangement by Huntley Floral) filled the halls of horror, not to mention "Freddy Krueger," "Frankenstein," vampires, ghouls, witches, and monsters of alt kinds.
Some took fright just listening to the horror from within, or seeing those who came out, and refused to go on. Some fell victim to the first face-to-face encounters and came back out the entrance. Sometimes a monster would provide a flashlighted escort for the daringly fearful. Or, they might go through ahead to warn everyone to take it easy on the little
kids. Older kids tried to be "cool" while pushing each other forward saying, "You go first!" They would exit trying to maintain that look of cool with flushed cheeks and fear in their eyes. Then they would show up later to go through it all again. The overall comments made it clear, "It was really scary!"
Jaycees and their helpers on Friday night included Mark Mercer, Mark Puffer, Bill Benton, Becki Schmalbeck, Paula Kohley, Laura Kohley, Joanna Pace, Laura Pace, Chad Tarnow, Peter Liput, Kevin Lessner, Kelly Kentgen, Patty Bearup, Chris Heckt, Emily Lombard, Chris Scholer, Scott Napperman, Cindy McDonald, Angela Webb, Cape Haselgren, Janis Mesick, and more who joined them on Saturday night.
Perot, Bush Win Huntley Student Mock Elections
Huntley High School students have been watching the debates on CNN during classes the past two to three weeks, and held a mock Presidental election on Nov. 3rd. The result was as follows: Ross Perot, the winner with 50% of the votes.
George Bush second with 32% of the votes and Bill Clinton with 18% of the high schcxil votes.
The Junior High students elected George Bush with 53% of the votes, Ross Perot was
second with 32% and Bill Clinton third with 16%. Grades 1st through 6th elected George Bush President with 39% of the votes, Ross Perot with 37% and Bill Clinton with 23%.
Democrats Sweep Nation, State Republicans Sweep County
Democratic Governor Bill Clinton took the presidential seat by storm with 349 electorates with Republican President Bush trailing with 79 electorates. However, in McHenry County, Bush took 41,356 votes while Clinton and Independent candidate H. Ross Perot trailed behind with 24,783 and 21,817 votes respectively.
Our new Illinois Senator will be Democrat Carol Moseley Braun but in McHenry Country she didn't take the lead. Republican Richard Williamson took 49,057 McHenry County votes while Braun got 32,339 and Conservative Party of Illinois Chad Koppie got 3,478.
The Victims' Rights State Amendment passed with 80% of the vote. The Education State Amendment got 58% yes and 42% no. However, the amendment needs 60% yes to pass.
Republican Don Manzullo beat Democrat John Cox, 55,659-
29,356 for representative to Congress 16th Congressional District. Republican Dick Klemm beat Democrat Michael Walkup, 51,371-32,372 for state senator 32nd Legislative District. Republican Cal Skinner Jr. beat Democrat Catherine Lee, 24,866-17,378 for representative in the General Assembly 64th Representative District.
Other county results were County Board District 6: Mary Lou Zierer-9,628; Ann Gilman- 9,313; Don Larson-9,027; William Russell-8,793; Charles Staab-6,302. County Auditor: Albert Jourdan-45,313; Christine Brewer-34,714. Clerk of Circuit Court: Vernon Kays- 53,532; Idamae Ruetsche- 26,085. County Recorder: Phyllis Walter-58,429; C. Treviranus-21,583. State's Attorney: Gary Pack-56,177; Richard Jackson-22,526. County Coroner: Marlene Lantz-57,370; Clark Landers-22,159. All figures are unofficial.
Ladyskins End Season Regional Champs
The Huntley High School Varsity Volleyball Team ended their season as IHSA Regional Tournament Champs last Saturday night in Genoa. They defeated St. Edwards 15-7, 15-7 and Burlington Central 15-7, 15-2 to win the title.
The Ladyskins went on to the first game of the IHSA Sectional Tournament Tuesday night at Kaneland High School. However, they lost to first-in-state ranked team St.
Francis, 15-12, 15-12. St. Francis will play against Harvard for the Sectional Championship Thursday night.
Overall the Varsity Ladyskins finished the season, 35-1. The girls hold the honor of 1992 Conference and Regional Champs. In addition, the Ladyskins won the Manteno Classic Tournament, the Huntley Tournament and the Buffalo Grove Tournament.
^"^^^K^Jf^
Watch for
The Huntley Farmside ^^^ Christmas Decoration Contest /^t in November! .

Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archival Image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was direct scanned from original material at 300 dpi. The original file size was 15111 kilobytes.

This material may be protected by U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17 U.S. Code).

Publisher

This Collection was digitized and loaded into CONTENTdm by OCLC Preservation Service Center (Bethlehem, PA) for the Huntley Area Public Library.

Source

Reproduction of library's print newspaper archives

Contributing Institution

Huntley Area Public Library

Language

ENG

FullText

See Page 6 For Holiday Recipes ...
SERVING THE PEOPLE OF HUNTLEY SINCE 1060
^)^t Jluntlep jfarmsJitre
HUNTLEY, ILLINOIS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1992 - VOLUME 32, NUMBER 29
USPS 580-360
This scary cast of characters terrified the town on Halloween weekend.
Jaycees Terrify IHuntley With Halioween Haunted House
By Joyce Liput
The Huntley Jaycees engaged in incredibly complicated preparations just to terrify the people of Huntley.
Together with the Huntley Park District, the Huntley Jaycees spent the week before Halloween turning Deicke Recreation Center's basement into a maze of frightful turns, tunnels and passages. "Monsters" of all descriptions began to gather for final preparations two hours before the "guests" arrived. Final instructions, flashlights and fire-extinguishers were issued as further safety precautions.
Just getting to the door could be unnerving, as patrons had the opportunity to slide their hands into bowls of brains, guts and eyeballs to get in the mood. With the screams of those going before echoing from within, they
proceeded down the stairs, a delightful look of anticipated fear on their faces. Bubbling cauldrons, a roaring chain saw, coffins (complete with dead flower arrangement by Huntley Floral) filled the halls of horror, not to mention "Freddy Krueger," "Frankenstein," vampires, ghouls, witches, and monsters of alt kinds.
Some took fright just listening to the horror from within, or seeing those who came out, and refused to go on. Some fell victim to the first face-to-face encounters and came back out the entrance. Sometimes a monster would provide a flashlighted escort for the daringly fearful. Or, they might go through ahead to warn everyone to take it easy on the little
kids. Older kids tried to be "cool" while pushing each other forward saying, "You go first!" They would exit trying to maintain that look of cool with flushed cheeks and fear in their eyes. Then they would show up later to go through it all again. The overall comments made it clear, "It was really scary!"
Jaycees and their helpers on Friday night included Mark Mercer, Mark Puffer, Bill Benton, Becki Schmalbeck, Paula Kohley, Laura Kohley, Joanna Pace, Laura Pace, Chad Tarnow, Peter Liput, Kevin Lessner, Kelly Kentgen, Patty Bearup, Chris Heckt, Emily Lombard, Chris Scholer, Scott Napperman, Cindy McDonald, Angela Webb, Cape Haselgren, Janis Mesick, and more who joined them on Saturday night.
Perot, Bush Win Huntley Student Mock Elections
Huntley High School students have been watching the debates on CNN during classes the past two to three weeks, and held a mock Presidental election on Nov. 3rd. The result was as follows: Ross Perot, the winner with 50% of the votes.
George Bush second with 32% of the votes and Bill Clinton with 18% of the high schcxil votes.
The Junior High students elected George Bush with 53% of the votes, Ross Perot was
second with 32% and Bill Clinton third with 16%. Grades 1st through 6th elected George Bush President with 39% of the votes, Ross Perot with 37% and Bill Clinton with 23%.
Democrats Sweep Nation, State Republicans Sweep County
Democratic Governor Bill Clinton took the presidential seat by storm with 349 electorates with Republican President Bush trailing with 79 electorates. However, in McHenry County, Bush took 41,356 votes while Clinton and Independent candidate H. Ross Perot trailed behind with 24,783 and 21,817 votes respectively.
Our new Illinois Senator will be Democrat Carol Moseley Braun but in McHenry Country she didn't take the lead. Republican Richard Williamson took 49,057 McHenry County votes while Braun got 32,339 and Conservative Party of Illinois Chad Koppie got 3,478.
The Victims' Rights State Amendment passed with 80% of the vote. The Education State Amendment got 58% yes and 42% no. However, the amendment needs 60% yes to pass.
Republican Don Manzullo beat Democrat John Cox, 55,659-
29,356 for representative to Congress 16th Congressional District. Republican Dick Klemm beat Democrat Michael Walkup, 51,371-32,372 for state senator 32nd Legislative District. Republican Cal Skinner Jr. beat Democrat Catherine Lee, 24,866-17,378 for representative in the General Assembly 64th Representative District.
Other county results were County Board District 6: Mary Lou Zierer-9,628; Ann Gilman- 9,313; Don Larson-9,027; William Russell-8,793; Charles Staab-6,302. County Auditor: Albert Jourdan-45,313; Christine Brewer-34,714. Clerk of Circuit Court: Vernon Kays- 53,532; Idamae Ruetsche- 26,085. County Recorder: Phyllis Walter-58,429; C. Treviranus-21,583. State's Attorney: Gary Pack-56,177; Richard Jackson-22,526. County Coroner: Marlene Lantz-57,370; Clark Landers-22,159. All figures are unofficial.
Ladyskins End Season Regional Champs
The Huntley High School Varsity Volleyball Team ended their season as IHSA Regional Tournament Champs last Saturday night in Genoa. They defeated St. Edwards 15-7, 15-7 and Burlington Central 15-7, 15-2 to win the title.
The Ladyskins went on to the first game of the IHSA Sectional Tournament Tuesday night at Kaneland High School. However, they lost to first-in-state ranked team St.
Francis, 15-12, 15-12. St. Francis will play against Harvard for the Sectional Championship Thursday night.
Overall the Varsity Ladyskins finished the season, 35-1. The girls hold the honor of 1992 Conference and Regional Champs. In addition, the Ladyskins won the Manteno Classic Tournament, the Huntley Tournament and the Buffalo Grove Tournament.
^"^^^K^Jf^
Watch for
The Huntley Farmside ^^^ Christmas Decoration Contest /^t in November! .